I had the same feeling, but liked it more than my wife, who said it was just 
"okay". I think she expected more because it's produced by Doug Liman, who 
directed the first Bourne movie, and produced the rest. 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "B Smith" <daikaij...@yahoo.com> 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Wednesday, July 14, 2010 2:25:44 PM 
Subject: [scifinoir2] Re: "Cover Affairs" on USA 






It's fun but there's very much of a been there done that feel about the show. 
I'll watch a few more episodes before making up my mind. 

--- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com , Martin Baxter <martinbaxt...@...> wrote: 
> 
> Keith, I had it Autotuned, but my Little Voice bade me remove the tag ten 
> minutes before the show came on, and I didn't watch it. No idea why. 
> 
> On Wed, Jul 14, 2010 at 11:58 AM, Keith Johnson 
> <keithbjohn...@...>wrote: 
> 
> > 
> > 
> > Did anyone watch it? What did you think? Going in, I had to shake my "This 
> > is a clone of 'Alias'" feeling, given that the principal is a young and new 
> > recruit to the CIA. And I have to admit there are still things that make 
> > one 
> > feel that way. But there are differences, the most notable of which that 
> > Annie isn't working for an evil organization posing to be the CIA--although 
> > her bosses definitely have their hidden agendas and secrets. The main 
> > difference in characterization seems to be that in Alias, Sydney wasn't as 
> > cynical as Annie is inside. Sydney went into the CIA for something to do, 
> > Annie has gone in because she was terribly hurt by a man and doesn't ever 
> > want to feel weak again. The action was constant, the blot zippy and fluid, 
> > and I never got bored. I also admit I like Piper Perabo as Annie. She's got 
> > a good mix of fresh and new, but tough and even cold when she needs to be. 
> > I 
> > also like the supporting cast: Christopher Gorham (Jake 2.0), Sendhil 
> > Ramamurthy (Suresh from "Heroes"), (Kari Matchet, "Invasion", Nate's 
> > ex-wife on "Leverage"), and Peter Gallagher. A fast and fun show, a la 
> > "Human Target" or "Burn Notice", it keep me entertained. 
> > 
> > One thing that struck me, though, was all the in-show advertising that went 
> > on. There were a huge number of product plugs in the show. Here's lines 
> > from 
> > the show I can recall: 
> > 
> > "Wow, you have a Starbucks inside the CIA?"... 
> > "The pipes here haven't been cleaned since the Johnson Administration. 
> > You'd be better off buying a bottle of Evian Water".... 
> > "I checked and see you've made several reservations in the last few months 
> > on OpenTable.com"... 
> > "It's 'Miller Time'!" 
> > "You're actually trying to use a Listerine Breath Strip to capture a 
> > fingerprint?" 
> > 
> > The insertions were handled well, but after a while, boy were they 
> > noticeable! Is this going to be the new way of television? I know "Eureka" 
> > plugged that Subaru of Jo's, and I remember an awful ep of "Smallville" in 
> > which Green-K infected StrideRite gum played a central role. 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> "If all the world's a stage and we are merely players, who the bloody hell 
> wrote the script?" -- Charles E Grant 
> 
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik 
> 


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